Salem News article.
Category Archives: Press
Little Neck restrictions postponed
Ipswich Chronicle article.
Feoffees move to expand Little Neck use in Ipswich
Ipswich Chronicle article.
The Feoffees, as always, putting the interests of the tenants above those of the beneficiaries.
Little Neck tenants fight seasonal restrictions in Ipswich
Ipswich Chronicle article.
Ipswich Town Meeting to decide pressing Little Neck battle
Ipswich Chronicle Letter to the editor by Clark Ziegler.
Judge upholds Little Neck sale
Ipswich Chronicle article.
To be clear, the only matter before this judge was our motion to stay (delay) the sale while the appeal proceeds. The appeal itself has not been heard, nor could it be in the 15 minutes that we were given to present this motion.
The Art of Stealing from the Rich and Dead
Many of the comments on the national press stories have referenced a recent case involving the Barnes art collection that has a lot of parallels. You can find a lot of coverage of the story on line. Here is just one example.
‘For Euer’ Not ‘Forever’ Up in Massachusetts Town
Wall Street Journal Law Blog column.
Payne would have approved Little Neck sale
This is the position put forth in an Ipswich Chronicle column from School Committee member Sean Gresh. Sean has been the most outspoken proponent for a sale in the past, and we appreciate his consistency even if we do not agree with his position.
We suggest, however, that you compare his opinion with the words of the School Committee’s own legal counsel at opening statements of the trial on December 12, 2011:
“When William Payne called for land in Ipswich to be held in trust forever for the benefit of the schools, and the evidence will show that the owner’s intent in that regard was to provide an asset that would inherently last forever. And land is basically a perpetual asset….We want a perpetual asset that will always last and return money to the school children, and will not be subject to the ups and downs of the market.”
The School Committee then proceeded to settle without presenting said evidence, the collection of which was paid for with $700,000 of taxpayer money. All the interveners are asking for is the right to follow through on this investment and present this evidence to a court of law willing to make a decision on the merits.
It is also worth noting that the position stated by the School Committee counsel above mirrors the position outlined at the May 2011 Town Meeting when Mitch Feldman stated in the presentation of the legal funding article: “As it turns out, Mr. Payne was right. Land provides the more stable, less volatile stream of distributions to the schools.” The article then received overwhelming support of Town Meeting. It was not even close.
As to the question posed as to what right the Rowley parents have to be interveners, it should be clear that as school choice parents with students in the Ipswich school system, their children are beneficiaries of the Trust as much as any child of an Ipswich resident. Where they differ, and what makes them unique legally, is that they do not have the right to vote for School Committee members.
Trust restrictions should be upheld
Ipswich Chronicle letter from George Soffron.